A guide to Building Yurts...or more specifically, how I built mine!
Based on Knowledge Gained from "Doing it Myself", and reading about it on-line.
I've now built three yurts, for myself and friends, and we go camping in Luxury in these a few times a year.
If you like the outdoors, but you hate having to crawl around in pokey little tents then this one's for you!
We sleep two of us in luxury in this tent, in a full queen-sized bed! Of course, sleeping on the floor, like a plastic tent, you could probably sleep 20 people, easily!. :-)
We have dedicated hanging space for our clothes so they don't crumple or anything, and lockable boxes for our belongings (or a lock on the door works too!)
When we invite other camping-inclined friends over for a party in our tent, we can confortably fit 15-20 people in, sitting around on cushions and lounging on the bed and on the rugs on the floor... now that's what I can a party tent! :-)
If you like pictures, please be sure to have a look at step 9 - it's got over 50 assembly photos on that step alone !
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Signing UpStep 1Overview of the parts and process.!
1) What a yurt is, and what it's made from.
2) How all the components should look when together.
If you've ever seen a yurt in the flesh, or photo's, or read a bit about them, that's enough.
As you can see from the photo/s, there are a few major components, so I'm going to write about each of these in turn, with some background info, and how to make them, and after that I'll show you how it all comes together for the assembly!
- Dimensions and background.
- Timber Components
- roof
- door.
- Metal Components
- bolts, pins, pegs.
- canvas components
- roof
- roof cap
- Assembly!
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I love this website and find so many great things to make. I am dissappointed at how some people make harsh or stupid comments about an authors attempt to share great ideas. I have lots of great ideas but am hessitant to share here.
Sharing an instructable plan or how-to should be an inspiration to others...if you want a perfect step by step plan of a perfect product then go buy a kit.
I believe that anyone who browses this site should have a spark of creativity or at least interest and should be thankful for an idea or another way of approaching a project. When others offer suggestions..it only makes it easier for another by tapping into their learning style . Critisizing or putting someone down for choice of pics or words is just wrong...(see nice comment policy)
i know how to make a traditional inuit tent in a couple of styles, perhaps I may combine the two and come up with something else.
THANKS FOR THE GREAT IDEAS AND INSTRUCTIONS...FAB PIC OF THE ORIGINAL MONGOLIAN HUT.IT INSPIRES ONE TO ADD COLOUR OR SOMETHING PERSONAL BY THE BUILDER!! GREAT JOB!! i HOPE YOU CONTINUE TO ADD MORE IDEAS:)
You guys who quibble and sniff about terminology just come off as pathetic. I don't see any of you publishing your "correct" versions anywhere here, especially in this kind of detail - are you just so hungry for some kind of validation that you have to p*ss on the welcome efforts of real makers like David? Just sayin'...
The first thing that is mentioned in the instructable is that the yurt with the orange door isn't his but an original and what the final outcome should be and then he goes into detail about how to do it.
you guys are complaining that you read it and it wasted your time? you clearly missed the first thing he said.
"this is a yurt made by real mongolians! (not by me). You can see mine in the instructable!"
"this is a yurt made by real mongolians! (not by me). You can see mine in the instructable!"
clearly you didn't read through it.
From what I have researched, it would have been ok for the mongolians to call it either. Gur means "home" so if you used it as your permanent home, you would call it a Gur. If you were on the road, like conquering half the world or something, as mongolians do, then it would have been a yurt as it would have then been just a temporary "dwellling"
I have a question for the physicists out there. I am positioning in an area somewhat prone to lightning. If I was to use a metal Khana (wooden trellis walls), would the metal trellis act as a Faraday cage with respect to protection from lighting as you would get in a car or a plane?
Cheers, jonnyxx.
Was amused to read some of the above comments re your yurt.
I have just acquired a beautiful river valley in Tasmania, Australia. It took everything I had with nothing left over for a house so I got interested in DIY which I have never been good at. Anyway, after agonising over all the options, including geodesic domes, mud brick, earth tubes, straw bale, containers and even a hole in the ground, I finally decide on a yurt as being the best way to go given my lack of skill set. Needless to say, I have done a lot of research and now, having just finished the clearing of the land with zero power tools (hard, but the clearance to thinness ratio is high:) I am ready to start on the yurt.
What I loved about your article was your ability to think outside the square and not be bound by a regimented code of "traditionalism" to achieve the desired yurt, esp in your use of the metal central ring.
Also bjurt's rings look pretty interesting too. I don't think I would have the woodworking skills for the traditional ring but metal I can do or get done easily.
Your ideas definitely fall into the many ways to skin a cat category. Many thanks for the inspiration, cheers, jonnyxx.